I'm grateful and humbled to be among the recipients of this great scholarship. This award has made it possible for me to be one step closer to achieving my dreams and I am thankful for the opportunity.

Numiopre “Pamela” Roberts, School of Social Work, 2017-18 recipient of the Southern Management Corporation Scholarship

Angela H. Brodie, PhD

Former Professor EmeritusDepartment of Pharmacology University of Maryland School of Medicine

Angela Hartley Brodie, PhD, professor emeritus in the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, and an internationally recognized scientist whose groundbreaking cancer research is considered among the greatest advances in treating breast cancer, passed away June 7, 2017, of complications from Parkinson’s disease at her home in Fulton, Md. She was 82.

Dr. Brodie's research revolutionized the treatment of hormone-dependent breast cancer worldwide. She pioneered the development of aromatase inhibitors, which are now considered among the most important contributions toward treating estrogen-driven breast cancer, the most common form of breast cancer in postmenopausal women. Her work developing aromatase inhibitors was a paradigm-shifting effort that began in the 1970s and was designed to reduce the level of the estrogen in the body and thereby block the growth of cancer cells. Aromatase is an enzyme that plays a key role in the biosynthesis of the hormone estrogen, which fuels the growth of cancer cells.

“Dr. Angela Brodie’s impact on the treatment of breast cancer has been unparalleled. It is because of her work that a disease that was once almost a certain death sentence, can now, for many, be successfully treated and managed,” said E. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBA, executive vice president for medical affairs at the University of Maryland, Baltimore and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and Dean of the University of Maryland School of Medicine. “She never gave up on her vision of finding a new treatment with fewer side effects, and many women around the world have benefited from her perseverance.”

Dr. Brodie’s research spanned decades and built upon her initial discoveries to create more powerful and specific aromatase inhibitors. “Dr. Brodie’s pioneering research is equal to the greatest advances in treating breast cancer in the last 150 years,” said Kevin J. Cullen, MD, the Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Distinguished Professor of Oncology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and director of the University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center. “Her work with aromatase inhibitors has saved the lives of thousands of women worldwide.

“Despite the incredible impact of her science, Angela was perhaps the most generous and unassuming scientist I have ever known. She was extraordinarily humble about her achievements and never sought attention for what she accomplished. She mentored dozens of students and junior faculty over the years and so the impact of her work will live on for years to come,” Dr. Cullen said.

“Though we are saddened by the news of Angela’s passing, we know that she will be forever remembered for her transformative and pioneering work in cancer research that has saved so many lives, said Michael Greenebaum, president of Greenebaum Enterprises, Inc., on behalf of the Greenebaum family. “We are heartened by the fact that her legacy will live on through the work of the Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Drs. Angela and Harry Brodie Distinguished Professorship in Translational Clinical Research at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.”

Dr. Brodie began investigating compounds to inhibit aromatase while at the Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology in Shrewsbury, Mass., initially working in a laboratory with her husband, Harry Brodie, PhD, a chemist who synthesized the first selective inhibitors in the early 1970s, including a potent compound called 4-hydroxyandrostenedione (4-OHA). She continued her research with 4-OHA after coming to the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1979, spearheading its development through clinical trials into a treatment for breast cancer. Released as Formestane for worldwide use in 1994, it was the first new agent in a decade specifically designed to treat breast cancer.

Early on, few other scientists gave her research much credence. Dr. Brodie’s first paper reporting the laboratory success of aromatase inhibitors at reducing estrogen levels was rejected because “they thought the finding was too obvious,” Dr. Brodie recalled. She tried to interest pharmaceutical companies, but many thought her work was unnecessary and that chemotherapy was the answer. It was only through her persistence that her experimental compound ever made it to clinical trial. She ended up making small batches of the aromatase inhibitor in her laboratory at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, and shipping it to the Royal Marsden Hospital in London where it was given to 11 women with advanced breast cancer as part of a clinical trial.

Among her many awards are the prestigious Charles F. Kettering Prize from the General Motors Cancer Research Awards in 2005, the Dorothy P. Landon-AACR Prize for Translational Cancer Research in 2006, and the Brinker Award for Scientific Distinction from the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation in 2000. Dr. Brodie was the first woman to receive the Kettering Prize, given for the most outstanding recent contribution to the diagnosis or treatment of cancer.